The Pioneer Press, Jan. 3 — A cohabiting couple who work together as
professors for the University of St. Thomas received a surprise call from a
school official last month. The pair were preparing to lead students to Australia,
and the administrator wanted to know what their sleeping arrangements would be
on the trip.

Ellen Kennedy, 57,
and Leigh Lawton, 61, live together as unmarried, heterosexual partners.
Neither is Catholic. The university told them they could go to Australia only
if they took separate rooms. They refused. The flight left without them, but
the controversy on campus is just getting warmed up.

“The bottom line
is it’s not appropriate, we don’t feel as a Catholic university, for unmarried
partners, homosexual or heterosexual, to travel together” officially with
students, said Doug Hennes, vice president for university and government
relations.

Conservative
Enclave

FOX NEWS, Dec. 26 — Christopher Flickinger may call himself “dean” and
pose in joke photos waving a small American flag, looking stern — but he says
he’s never been more serious about eliminating what he claims is pervasive
anti-conservatism on college campuses today.

“When I was on
campus, I had no help,” the recent Ohio State University graduate told Fox
News. “I was harassed, intimidated, shouted down.”

Flickinger,
schooled in broadcast journalism, said he wants to provide the support he never
had as a lonely conservative in college. So, in November, he launched the
Network of College Conservatives (conservativesoncampus.com). The group will
act, he says, as “a link for these conservative students, to let them know they
are not alone.”

White
Supremacy Study

THE COURIER-JOURNAL, Dec. 16 — A
Bellarmine University task force will study what constitutes acceptable speech
on campus after receiving complaints about a white-supremacist armband worn by
a student.

Andrei Chira, 18,
stirred up controversy by wearing a “Blood and Honour” armband decorated with a
symbol of the group. On its website, the group identifies itself as a promoter
of “white pride and white power,” and traces its origins to the British
“skinhead” movement.

So far, Bellarmine
officials have not asked Chira to remove the armband that he said he has been
wearing for the past few months.

Joseph McGowan,
president of the Catholic college in Louisville, Ky., said in a statement that
“most, if not all” members of the Bellarmine community are upset by the views
that the armband represents. But McGowan said forcing Chira to remove it would
be “denying free speech, which I believe is contrary to being a true
university.”

Funds
to Follow?

SIOUX CITY JOURNAL, Dec. 5 —
Creighton University in Omaha has launched a $350 million campaign to expand
the university, fund academic programs, increase the university’s endowment and
raise its profile.

To date, the
campaign has already raised $226 million in money and pledges. Jesuit Father
John Schlegel, the university’s president, said the initial response to the
fund-raising effort has been “quite surprising and very gratifying.”

Creighton, one of
28 Jesuit-run universities in the United States, has a student body of 6,800
full-time students. Its most recent fund-raising campaign, in 1999, raised $127
million.

Father Schlegel
said the campaign will help the university reduce its dependency on tuition
income, which he said was a key way the university could contain tuition
increases and make the university accessible to a diverse student population.

He also hopes to
expand the university by continuing to buy property around the campus.